As long as you cite your source, it is not considered plagiarism. But most teachers do not allow you to copy a page, even if you cite it.
indefinite
The reader can infer from the article by looking at various elements.
My is a possessive adjective. Anxiously is an adverb modifying the verb waited. The is an article. (By the oven is an adverb prepositional phrase.)
"A recent study by University of Texas researcher Jakob Vinther and colleagues is a wonderful example of the high-tech tools many modern palaeontologists use to understand fossils."
The article (on robots) has excellent Photography.
"Time" is the subject, "is" is the verb, and "money" is the predicate nominative. There is no article (a, an, the) in that sentence.
Stripling, excellent article.
In the given sentence, 'will leave early for the holidays' form the predicate; 'the' is the article which acts as determiner of the noun 'employees'. 'early for the holidays' is the adverbial phrase which is part of the complete predicate mentioned above.
No. Minimum sentence structure is subject+predicate, not preposition.
There is no preposition in the sentence "The plane was late." The - article plane - noun (subject) was - linking verb late - predicate adjective
Pilate = subject wrote = predicate an = article inscription = direct object on = preposition the = article cross = object of the preposition
A = article multitude = subject (noun) of = preposition the = article heavenly = adjective hosts = object of the preposition was = predicate (verb) with = preposition the - article angel - object of the preposition
A - article diamond - noun (subject) is - verb (linking verb) unbreakable - adjective (predicate adjective)
Poor - adjective shepherds - subject heard - predicate the - article songs - direct object of - preposition the - article angels - object of the preposition
1. On (preposition)2. day (noun)3. nothing (pronoun)4. looks (linking verb predicate)Adjectives:1. A (article)2. breezy3. lifeless (Predicate Adjective)
A separate portion of a written paper, paragraph, or sentence; an article, stipulation, or proviso, in a legal document., A subordinate portion or a subdivision of a sentence containing a subject and its predicate., See Letters clause / close, under Letter.